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Œuvres Tatien le Syrien (120-173) Diatessaron Introduction - The Diatessaron of Tatian

17

The Author of the Diatessaron.--The Diatessaron is such an impersonal work that we do not need to know very much about its compiler. 1 It will suffice here to say that he tells us himself that he was born "in the land of the Assyrians," and brought up a heathen. After travelling in search of knowledge, he settled at Rome, where he became a pupil of Justin Martyr, professed Christianity, and wrote in Greek his Address to the Greeks, 2 translated in vol. iii. of the Ante-Nicene Christian Library. He was too independent in his attitude to maintain a permanent popularity, and after Justin's death left Rome and returned to Mesopotamia. It was probably here that he issued in Syriac his most important work, the Diatessaron, which won such a warm place in the heart of the Syrian church. Among the Greek scholars, however, he became more and more regarded as a heretic, Encratite (ascetic), and Gnostic.


  1. The latest discussion of the question whether this really was Tatian is Mr. Rendel Harris's article in the Contemp. Rev., Aug., 1895. ↩

  2. Best ed. by Eduard Schwartz, in Texte und Untersuchungen, IV. Band, Heft 1. ↩

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